Dietas Perder Peso En Una Semana - Regimen Para Adelgazar

The
purpose of Musicfest Northwest is to encourage and aid
young people to study music and the arts. The association is
operated as a civic non-profit corporation. Its aim is to
develop in young people an enjoyment and appreciation of all
the arts, encourage the study of music and the arts, and
promote high standards of performance. Entrants in the festival
receive an individual written and oral evaluation of their
performance by qualified teachers and concert artists.

The
Festival, organized in 1946 to encourage and aid young people
to study music and the arts, is operated as a civic non-profit
corporation. Its aim is to develop in young people an
enjoyment and appreciation of all the arts, encourage the
study of music and the arts, and promote high standards of
performance. Entrants in the Festival receive an individual
written and oral evaluation of their performance by qualified
teachers and concert artists.

Yearly
participation ranges from 1,200 to 1,500 young musicians and
is considered to be the largest festival of its kind in the
United States.

There have
been over 47,000 entrants in the last 56 years, participating
in ten divisions: piano, flute, organ, art, ballet, voice,
percussion, string, reed and brass. The students range from
first grade through post-graduate work.

The highly
respected Young Artist competition has produced some leaders
in the artistic world. Renowned baritones Thomas Hampson and
Frank Hernandez; Symphony Concertmaster Kelly Farris; pianists
Stephen Drury and Greg Presley; mezzo-soprano Linda Adams
Caple; and violinist Jason Moody are a few of the Festival's
former participants.

NAME CHANGE

The
Festival changed its name to Musicfest Northwest in 2001 and
continues the tradition of staging adjudications and concerts
the second week of May. Its primary goal is to further youth
arts education by inviting some of the nation's leading
artistic educators to evaluate, counsel, and encourage young
participants.

Originally
known as The Greater Spokane Music and Allied Arts
Festival, the organization was founded in 1946 by Spokane
piano teacher Josephine Clark to celebrate the end of World
War II and to "promote the arts."